Silenced: How Apostasy and Blasphemy Codes Are Choking Freedom Worldwide (41 page)

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Authors: Paul Marshall,Nina Shea

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Rasmussen, the prime minister, responded with a letter in which he reaffirmed his support for cross-cultural dialogue. But he also stated, “The freedom of expression is the very foundation of the Danish democracy,” and that while concerned parties could bring cases of blasphemy or hate speech to court under existing laws, “it is for the courts to decide in individual cases.”
53
Rasmussen refused to meet with the ambassadors.

Thus thwarted, the Danish imams organized delegations to spread cartoon rage across the Middle East. There, they displayed not only the
Jyllands-Posten
cartoons but also images from other Danish publications as well as three significantly more offensive, entirely unrelated drawings, whose origin is murky. The threesome made wildly exaggerated claims about repression against Muslims in Denmark; for example, asserting that they are not legally permitted to build mosques.
54
Representatives of the imams’ group traveled to Cairo, Damascus, and Beirut. They received a particularly warm reception in Egypt and enjoyed the assistance of the Egyptian ambassador to Denmark in organizing high-level meetings. Meanwhile, word of the drawings spread.

By early December 2005, there were reports that the Pakistani Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami had offered a large reward for anyone who killed one of the cartoonists.
55
By December 18,
Jyllands-Posten
faced “an avalanche of death threats against its staff,” and the Danish Security and Intelligence Service (PET) had become involved. As the crisis continued to escalate, Danish Muslims unsuccessfully attempted to bring criminal charges against
Jyllands-Posten
on the basis of laws banning blasphemy and hate speech.
56

At the same time, the cartoons were condemned as blasphemy by the OIC, the Muslim World League, and the Arab League, while the World Assembly of Muslim Youth charged Denmark with “Islamophobia.”
57
In late December, the Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (ISESCO) threatened a political and economic boycott if no official apology was forthcoming from Denmark, and later it followed through on this threat. ISESCO’s president, Abdulaziz Othman Altwajiri, described the cartoons as “a form of racism.”
58
The December 2005 OIC summit in Mecca initially convened to discuss sectarian violence and terrorism but took up the cartoons issue, and the Danish imams’ dossier was passed around on the sidelines.
59

In the last days of January 2006, fifteen gunmen occupied an EU office in the Gaza Strip. They claimed that Norwegians (a Norwegian paper had republished some cartoons) and Danes would be barred from the area, and they demanded an apology from the two governments. A German NGO volunteer was briefly kidnapped from a hotel in Nablus, in the West Bank; and the Danish Red Cross and the Norwegian People’s Aid Group withdrew employees from Gaza, the former citing “concrete threats.” The Red Cross also pulled an employee from Yemen. Danish troops in Iraq began operating under an elevated alert level.
60

Rasmussen repeatedly stressed that the government could not apologize for
Jyllands-Posten
, since “the Danish government and the Danish nation as such
cannot be held responsible for what is published in independent media.”
61
Contrary to OIC and UN pronouncements on the subject, he affirmed that “freedom of speech is absolute … it is not negotiable.”
62
In a January 31 statement, Rasmussen explained that “as my personal opinion I deeply respect the religious feelings of other people,” and added, “I would never myself have chosen to depict religious symbols in this way.” Nonetheless, he continued to maintain his position, stating, “freedom of expression … is a vital and indispensable part of a democratic society.”
63

The Pen versus the Sword
 

Against this backdrop of mounting pressure and intimidation, a number of European newspapers decided to demonstrate their support for freedom of speech. On February 1, Germany’s
Die Welt
reprinted the cartoons. Papers in France, Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and Italy published the images on the same day.
64
France Soir
and the Netherlands’
De Volkskrant
quickly became part of the story itself when they received bomb threats.
65

On February 3, 2006, Rasmussen met with Muslim ambassadors and reiterated that, while he was “distressed” over the way the cartoons had offended some Muslims, “a Danish government can never apologise on behalf of a free and independent newspaper.”
66
That same day, Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi, a “special advisor” to the Muslim Brotherhood and widely followed figure in the Arab media, issued a fatwa that called for a “day of anger.”
67
In a sermon broadcast on Qatar TV, he told his audience, “We are lions that zealously protect their dens, and avenge affronts to their sanctities.… We are a nation that should rage for the sake of Allah, His Prophet, and His book.” He also called for a UN resolution against “affronts to prophets” and reiterated the boycott threat.
68

As Rasmussen was meeting with Muslim leaders on Friday, February 3, protests surged across the Muslim world. Rioters railed against the cartoons, with crowds reaching tens of thousands in some places. Threats and bombings rocked the Palestinian territories. Demonstrations erupted in Somalia, with protesters in the country’s northeastern region of Puntland marching on the buildings housing UN and NGO personnel. Protestors gathered outside the Danish embassy in Bangkok and trampled the country’s flag; Indian police scattered protesters in Delhi with water cannons and tear gas.
69
Two protesters were killed and six police officers injured when demonstrators attempted to force their way into an American airbase in Bagram, Afghanistan, and hundreds of demonstrators in Laghman province called for “death to Denmark” and “death to France.” One protester told the BBC that those behind the cartoons’ publication “want to know whether Muslims are extremists or not”; as far as he was concerned, he went on to say, “Death to them and to their newspapers.”
70

On February 10, thousands of Muslims across Africa, Asia, and the Mideast set out from their mosques after Friday prayers to demonstrations against the
cartoons, some ending in violence despite calls by many religious leaders for the protests to remain peaceful. On February 9, top Taliban commander Mullah Dadullah claimed that his organization had recruited 100 suicide bombers since the start of the controversy over Denmark’s “blasphemous” cartoons. He offered a reward of 100 kilograms of gold to anyone who murdered the cartoonists.
71
In Afghanistan, by February 11, eleven people had died in riots.
72

Next door in Pakistan, on February 14, bank guards in Lahore shot and killed two demonstrators in a crowd that was attacking buildings. In Islamabad, protesters had to be dispersed with tear gas.
73
Three people died in protests the following day. A 70,000-strong protest in Peshawar escalated into attacks on foreign businesses by youths wielding rocks and guns. Demonstrations across the country on February 16 drew tens of thousands of participants; there were 40,000 in Karachi alone, where rioters burned effigies of the Danish prime minister and called for breaking off relations with Denmark. A Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise in Peshawar—its connection to
Jyllands-Posten
unknown—was set ablaze. Attackers also targeted the offices of a Norwegian cell phone company. Turabal Haq of Jamat Ahl-e-Sunnat, the group responsible for the Karachi demonstration, declared, “The movement to protect the prophet’s sanctity will continue until the pens of the blasphemous people are broken and their tongues get quiet.”
74
Several protests ended in violence against diplomatic targets in Indonesia, Libya, Syria, Lebanon, and Iran. Denmark and Norway advised their citizens to leave Syria, and Denmark withdrew its ambassadors from Tehran, Jakarta, and Damascus, variously citing threats and a lack of host government protection.
75

Attacks on Christians
 

In some cases, what began as anger at a group of largely secularist Danish cartoonists and editors also led to attacks against Christian targets. In Turkey, on February 5, a gunman murdered Italian priest Andrea Santoro, who had founded the magazine
Window to the Middle East
to encourage interfaith dialogue.
76
A Maronite church in Beirut, Lebanon, was stoned despite attempts by mainstream Sunni clerics to prevent such acts since, as one cleric in
Dar Al Fatwa
asked, “What do the people who live in Ashrafiyeh have to do with the people who published those blasphemous cartoons about our Prophet?”
77

Pakistani protesters also targeted Christians. Rioters in Sukkur burned a Christian church after tensions over
Jyllands-Posten
were exacerbated by allegations that a Christian man had burned pages from a Qur’an.
78
On February 17, a crowd in the city of Kasur assaulted a United Presbyterian girls’ school, breaking the windows and forcing the occupants to flee; the rioters also attempted to attack a Catholic church. In Peshawar, students and members of Islamist groups attacked a missionary school. At the behest of local Christian leaders, Muslim official Pir Ibrahim Sialvi reminded listeners on February 12 that Christians were “local people” and not involved with the cartoons.
79

In Nigeria, cartoon demonstrations quickly gave way to attacks on Christians that set off widespread interreligious violence. On February 18, cartoon rioters in the northern states of Borno and Katsin set eleven churches alight and attempted to burn one man alive; sixteen people were killed.
80
Muslim rioters in the northern city of Maiduguri, carrying machetes and iron rods, burned thirty churches. In the melee, at least eighteen people, mostly Christians, died, including three children and one priest, Fr. Michael Gajere.
81
In Bauchi, also in the north, twenty-five people died in attacks against Christians, which may also have been linked to unfounded rumors of Qur’an desecration by a Christian schoolteacher.

Muslim Government Responses
 

Muslim government officials joined the protesters in wholeheartedly condemning the cartoons, but they took mixed stances on the demonstrations themselves. In some cases, they appear to have been directly involved, while in others the reaction to an issue initially publicized by governments now appeared to be growing beyond their control.
82
Given the difficulty of holding a truly spontaneous demonstration under Iran’s and Syria’s regimes, it was widely held that the regimes themselves were directly responsible for the protests that occurred on their territory.

Iran’s Ayatollah Khamenei called violent protests in Tehran “justified and even holy,” while the Iranian government cut trade ties with Denmark and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad threatened a boycott of all countries in which the cartoons had appeared.
83
In India, an Islamic court issued a death fatwa against the cartoonists, and a minister in the state of Uttar Pradesh offered a reward of $11 million and the recipient’s weight in gold for any successful cartoonist-killer.
84
Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan proclaimed that press freedom should have its limits; Pakistan president Pervez Musharraf claimed the cartoons were indefensible on grounds of free expression.
85
Afghan president Hamid Karzai called for “a strong measure” from western nations to prevent the appearance of offensive cartoons. Iraq’s transportation ministry declared a freeze on its contracts with Denmark and Norway, and the Basra city council urged for Danish troops to be pulled from the country if Denmark’s government would not apologize.
86
Indonesia’s president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, urged Muslims to accept apologies for the cartoons but also declared that their republication “sends a conflicting message to the Muslim community: that in a democracy it is permissible to offend Islam.”
87

Some leaders, while denouncing the caricatures, also condemned the cartoon violence. Malaysia’s prime minister, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, urged cartoon protesters to keep their response within reasonable bounds.
88
While charging the West with widespread “demonization of Islam and the vilification of Muslims,” he also called for Muslims to refrain from “sweeping denunciations of Christians, Jews and the West.”
89
Kuwait’s Parliament called for legislation banning insults
against religions and lauded Muslims’ desire to defend Muhammad but also declared that “irresponsible acts … disfigure that emotion and makes it look like aggressiveness and destructiveness.”
90
Iraq’s Ayatollah Sistani, while condemning the “horrific action” of the cartoons’ publication, also faulted “misguided and oppressive” parts of the Muslim community whose deeds “projected a distorted and dark image of the faith of justice, love and brotherhood.” Elsewhere, newspapers were shut down and editors were arrested.
91

On February 20, a number of leading Islamic scholars and professors, including the grand mufti of Egypt, issued a fatwa that denounced the cartoons’ publication as “an entirely unacceptable crime of aggression.” It also called on Muslims “to exercise self-restraint” and avoid “acts not sanctioned in Islam, such as breaking treaties and breaching time honored agreements by attacking foreign embassies or innocent people and other targets.” However, the fatwa also urged the OIC and Muslim governments “to press the United Nations to issue a declaration criminalizing any insult to Muhammad, Jesus or Moses or to any other revered prophetic figure.” Indeed, this officially endorsed prong of the antiblasphemy effort would remain an issue long after the violent protests died down.
92

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